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Oil Painting -> Michelangelo
Buonarroti
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Michelangelo Buonarroti
Michelangelo (full name Michelangelo di Lodovico Buonarroti
Simoni) (March 6, 1475 - February 18, 1564) was a Renaissance
sculptor, architect, painter, and poet.
Michelangelo Buonarroti, by Marcello VenustiMichelangelo
is famous for creating the fresco ceiling of the Sistine Chapel,
as well as the Last Judgment over the altar, and "The
Martyrdom of St. Peter"
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Life history
"The Conversion of St.
Paul" in the Vatican's Cappella Paolina; among his many
sculptures are those of David and the Pieta, as well as the
Virgin, Bacchus, Moses, Rachel, Leah, and members of the Medici
family; he also designed the dome of St. Peter's Basilica. Michelangelo was born near Arezzo, in Caprese, Tuscany, Italy in
1475. His father, Lodovico, was the resident magistrate in Caprese.
As genealogies of the day indicated that the Buonarroti descended
from Countess Matilda of Tuscany, the family was considered minor
nobility. However, Michelangelo was raised in Florence and later
lived with a sculptor and his wife in the town of Settignano where
his father owned a marble quarry and a small farm. Michelangelo
once said to the biographer of artists Giorgio Vasari, "What
good I have comes from the pure air of your native Arezzo, and also
because I sucked in chisels and hammers with my nurse's milk."
Against his father's wishes, Michelangelo chose to be the apprentice
of Domenico Ghirlandaio for three years starting in 1488. Impressed,
Domenico recommended him to the ruler of Florence, Lorenzo de' Medici.
From 1490 to 1492, Michelangelo attended Lorenzo's school and was
influenced by many prominent people who modified and expanded his
ideas on art and even his feelings about sexuality. It was during
this period that Michelangelo created two reliefs: Battle of the
Centaurs and Madonna of the Steps.
Michelangelo's Pietà was carved in 1499, when the sculptor
was 24 years old.After the death of Lorenzo in 1492, Piero de' Medici
(Lorenzo's oldest son and new head of the Medici family), refused
to support Michelangelo's artwork. Also at that time, the ideas
of Savonarola became popular in Florence. Under those two pressures,
Michelangelo decided to leave Florence and stay in Bologna for three
years. Soon afterwards, Cardinal San Giorgio purchased Michelangelo's
marble Cupid and decided to summon him to Rome in 1496. Influenced
by Roman antiquity, he produced the Bacchus and the Pietà.
Four years later, Michelangelo returned to Florence where he produced
arguably his most famous work, the marble David. He also painted
the Holy Family of the Tribune.
Michelangelo was summoned back to Rome in 1503 by the newly appointed
Pope Julius II and was commissioned to build the Pope's tomb. However,
under the patronage of Julius II, Michelangelo had to constantly
stop work on the tomb in order to accomplish numerous other tasks.
The most famous of those were the monumental paintings on the ceiling
of the Vatican's Sistine Chapel which took four years (1508 - 1512)
to complete. Due to those and later interruptions, Michelangelo
worked on the tomb for 40 years without ever finishing it.
In 1513 Pope Julius II died and his successor Pope Leo X, a Medici,
commissioned Michelangelo to reconstruct the façade of the
basilica of San Lorenzo in Florence and to adorn it with sculptures.
Michelangelo agreed reluctantly. The three years he spent in creating
drawings and models for the facade, as well as attempting to open
a new marble quarry at Pietrasanta specifically for the project,
were among the most frustrating in his career, as work was abruptly
cancelled by his financially-strapped patrons before any real progress
had been made.
Apparently not the least embarassed by this turnabout, the Medici
later came back to Michelangelo with another grand proposal, this
time for a family funerary chapel in the basilica of San Lorenzo.
Fortunately for posterity, this project, occupying the artist for
much of the 1520s and 1530s, was more fully realized. Though still
incomplete, it is the best example we have of the integration of
the artist's scuptural and architectural vision, since Michelangleo
created both the major sculptures as well as the interior plan.
Ironically the most prominent tombs are those of two rather obscure
Medici who died young, a son and grandson of Lorenzo. Il Magnifico
himself is buried in an obscure corner of the chapel, not given
a free-standing monument, as originally intended.
Michelangelo's The Last Judgement. Saint Bartholomew is shown
holding the knife of his martyrdom and his flayed skin. The face
of the skin is recognizable as Michelangelo.In 1527, the Florentine
citizens, encouraged by the sack of Rome, threw out the Medici and
restored the republic. A siege of the city ensued, and Michelangelo
went to the aid of his beloved Florence by working on the city's
fortifications from 1528 to 1529. The city fell in 1530 and the
Medici were restored to power. Completely out of sympathy with the
repressive reign of the ducal Medici, Michelangelo left Florence
for good in the mid-1530s, leaving assistants to complete the Medici
chapel. Years later his body was brought back from Rome for interment,
fufilling the maestro's last request to be buried in his beloved
Tuscany.
The fresco of The Last Judgment on the altar wall of the Sistine
Chapel was commissioned by Pope Paul III, and Michelangelo worked
on it from 1534 to 1541. Then in 1546, Michelangelo was appointed
architect of St. Peter's Basilica in the Vatican, and designed its
dome.
On February 18, 1564, Michelangelo died in Rome at the age of 89.
His life was described in Giorgio Vasari's "Vite".
When the work was finished on The Last Judgment in (October 1541),
Michelangelo was accused of intolerable obscenity for his depictions
of naked figures showing genitals (and inside the private chapel
of the Pope). A violent censorship campaign was organized by Cardinal
Carafa and Monsignor Sernini (Mantua's ambassador) to remove the
frescoes, but the Pope resisted. In coincidence with Michelangelo's
death, a law was issued to cover genitals ("Pictura in Cappella
Ap.ca coopriantur"). So Daniele da Volterra, an apprentice
of Michelangelo, covered with sort of perizomas (briefs) the genitals,
leaving unaltered the complex of bodies (see details [1]). When
the work was restored in 1993, the restorers chose not to remove
the perizomas of Daniele; however, a faithful uncensored copy of
the original, by Marcello Venusti, is now in Naples, at the Capodimonte
Museum. Censorship always followed Michelangelo, once described
as "inventor delle porcherie" (inventor of obscenities,
in a sense that in Italian sounds like he had created genitals).
The "fig-leaf campaign" of the Counter Reformation to
cover all representations of human genitals in paintings and sculptures
started with Michelangelo's works. To give two examples, the bronze
statue of "Cristo della Minerva" (church of Santa Maria
sopra Minerva, Rome) was covered, as it remains today, and the statue
of the naked child Jesus in "Madonna of Bruges" (Belgium)
remained covered for several decades. A similar campaign occurred
in Victorian Britain. Even today, the genital of 'David' in the
Victoria and Albert Museum still gets covered with a stone fig leaf
during royal visits.
Michelangelo the architect
Laurentian Library
Around 1530 Michaelangelo designed the Laurentian Library in Florence,
attached to the church of San Lorenzo. He produced new styles such
as pilasters tapering thinner at the bottom, and a staircase with
contrasting rectangular and curving forms.
Medici Chapel
Palazzo Farnese
St Peter's Basilica
Michelangelo at the Campidoglio
Michelangelo's first designs for solving the intractable urbanistic,
symbolic, political and propaganda program for the Campidoglio dated
from 1536. The commission was from the Farnese Pope Paul III, who
wanted a symbol of the new Rome to impress Charles V, Holy Roman
Emperor, who was expected in 1538. The hill was the Capitoline,
the heart of pagan Rome, though that connection was largely obscured
by its other role as the center of the civic government of Rome,
revived as a commune in the 11th century. The city's government
was now to be firmly in papal control, but the Campidoglio was the
former scene of many movements of urban resistance, such as the
dramatic scenes of Cola di Rienzi's revived republic. Approximately
in the middle, not to Michelangelo's liking, now stood the only
equestrian bronze to have survived since Antiquity, Marcus Aurelius,
the philosopher emperor. He apparently owed his survival largely
because popular culture had mistaken him for Constantine the Great,
revered as the first Christian emperor by plebs and popes alike.
Michelangelo provided an unassuming pedestal for it.
It was slow work: little was actually completed in Michelangelo's
lifetime, but work continued faithfully to his designs and the Campidoglio
was completed in the 17th century, except for the paving design.
Michelangelo provided new fronts to the two official buildings
of Rome's civic government, which very approximately faced each
other, the Palazzo dei Conservatori and the Palazzo Senatore, which
had been built over the Tabularium that had once housed the archives
of ancient Rome, and which now houses the Capitoline Museums, the
oldest museum of antiquities. Michelangelo devised a monumental
stair (the "Cordonata") to reach the high piazza, so that
the Campidoglio resolutely turned its back on the Forum that it
had once commanded, and he gave the space a new building at the
far end, to close the vista. The Cordonata is a ramped stair that
can be accessed on horseback by the sufficiently great, though it
was not in place when Emperor Charles arrived, and the imperial
party had to scramble up the slope from the Forum to view the works
in progress. The unfolding sequence, Cordonata piazza and the central
palazzo are the first urban introduction of the "cult of the
axis" that will occupy Italian garden plans and reach fruition
in France (Giedion 1962).
The Palazzo dei Conservatori was the first use of a giant order
that spanned two storeys, here with a range of Corinthian pilasters
and subsidiary Ionic columns flanking the ground-floor loggia openings
and the second floor windows. Another giant order would serve later
for the exterior of St Peter's. A balustrade punctuated by sculptures
atop the giant pilasters capped the composition, one of the most
influential of Michelangelo's designs. The sole arched motif in
the entire design are the segmental pediments over the windows,
which give a slight spring to the completely angular vertical-horizontal
balance of the design.
Michelangelo's systematizing of the Campidoglio, engraved by Étienne
Dupérac, 1568The bird's-eye view of the engraving by Étienne
Dupérac shows Michelangelo's solution to the problems of
the space in the Piazza del Campidoglio. Even with their new facades
centering them on the new palazzo at the rear, the space was a trapezoid,
and the facades did not face each other squarely. Worse than that,
the whole site sloped (to the left in the engraving). Michelangelo's
solution was radical. Since no "perfect" forms would work,
his apparent oval in the paving is actually egg-shaped, narrower
at one end. The travertine design set into the paving is perfectly
level: around its perimeter, low steps arise and die away into the
paving as the slope requires. Its center springs slightly, so that
one senses that one is standing on the exposed segment of a gigantic
egg all but buried at the center of the city at the center of the
world, as Michelangelo's historian Charles de Tolnay pointed out
(Charles De Tolnay, 1930). An interlaced twelve-pointed star makes
a subtle reference to the constellations, revolving around this
space called Caput mundi, the "head of the world".
The paving design was never executed by the popes, who may have
detected a subtext of less-than-Christian import. Benito Mussolini
ordered the paving completed to Michelangelo's design— in
1940.
Michelangelo the man
David statue, in Florence,Michelangelo, who was often arrogant with
others and constantly unsatisfied with himself, thought that art
originated from inner inspiration and from culture. In contradiction
to the ideas of his rival, Leonardo da Vinci, Michelangelo saw nature
as an enemy that had to be overcome. The figures that he created
are therefore in forceful movement; each is in its own space apart
from the outside world. For Michelangelo, the job of the sculptor
is to free the forms that, he believed, were already inside the
stone. This can most vividly be seen in his unfinished statuary
figures, which to many appear to be struggling to free themselves
from the stone.
He also instilled into his figures a sense of moral cause for action.
A good example of this can be seen in the facial expression of his
most famous work, the marble statue David. Arguably his second most
famous work is the fresco on the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel which
is a synthesis of architecture, sculpture & painting. His Last
Judgement, also in the Sistine Chapel, is a depiction of extreme
crisis.
Several anecdotes reveal that Michelangelo's skill, especially
in sculpture, was deeply appreciated in his own time. It is said
that when still a young apprentice, he had made a pastiche of a
Roman statue (Il Putto Dormiente, the sleeping child) of such beauty
and perfection, that it was later sold in Rome as an ancient Roman
original. Another better-known anecdote claims that when finishing
the Moses (San Pietro in Vincoli, Rome), Michelangelo violently
hit the knee of the statue with a hammer, shouting, "Why don't
you speak to me?"
Love life
Fundamental to Michelangelo's art is his love of male beauty, which
attracted him both aesthetically and emotionally. Such feelings
caused him great anguish, and he expressed the struggle between
platonic ideals and carnal desire in his sculpture, drawing and
his poetry, too, for among his other accomplishments Michelangelo
was the great Italian lyric poet of the 16th century.
The sculptor loved a great many youths, many of whom posed for
him and likewise slept with him. Some were of high birth, like the
sixteen year old Cecchino dei Bracci, a boy of exquisite beauty
whose death, only a year after their meeting in 1543, inspired the
writing of forty eight funeral epigrams. Others were street wise
and took advantage of the sculptor. Febbo di Poggio, in 1532, peddled
his charms - in answer to Michelangelo's love poem he asks for money.
Earlier, Gherardo Perini, in 1522, had stolen from him shamelessly.
His greatest love was Tommaso dei Cavalieri (1516–1574),
who was 16 years old when Michelangelo met him in 1532, at the age
of 57. In their first exchange of letters, January 1, 1533, Michelangelo
declares: Your lordship, only worldly light in this age of ours,
you can never be pleased with another man's work for there is no
man who resembles you, nor one to equal you. . . It grieves me greatly
that I cannot recapture my past, so as to longer be at your service.
As it is, I can only offer you my future, which is short, for I
am too old. . . That is all I have to say. Read my heart for "the
quill cannot express good will." Cavalieri was open to the
older man's affection: I swear to return your love. Never have I
loved a man more than I love you, never have I wished for a friendship
more than I wish for yours. He remained devoted to his lover till
the very end, holding his hand as he draws his last breath.
Michelangelo dedicated to him over three hundred sonnets and madrigals,
constituting the largest sequence of poems composed by him. Though
modern apologists hasten to assert the relationship was merely a
Platonic affection, the sonnets are the first large sequence of
poems in any modern tongue addressed by one man to another, predating
Shakespeare's sonnets to his young friend by a good fifty years.
I feel as lit by fire a cold countenance
That burns me from afar and keeps itself ice-chill;
A strength I feel two shapely arms to fill
Which without motion moves every balance.
— (Michael Sullivan, translation)
The homoeroticism of Michelangelo's poetry was obscured when his
grand nephew, Michelangelo the Younger, published an edition of
the poetry in 1623 with the gender of pronouns changed. John Addington
Symonds undid this change by translating the original sonnets into
English and writing a two-volume biography, published in 1893.
Michelangelo's Love Sonnets & Madrigals to Tommaso de Cavalieri
translated by Michael Sullivan
The paintings are the excellent portrayal of the events and scenes
that we see around us. The painters are the best cameras of the
world. They reproduce many different types of pictures. They even
draw imaginary pictures that do not exist in this world. We tend
to use both thinned oil paints and dense oil paints. Masterpieces
can be dyed more than once, but each time it may be different from
the existing paintings.h
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